This book is a biographical survey of the Bible with a focus on leadership. It opens with two chapters giving a brief overview of leadership concepts in the Old and New Testaments. From there it walks through the lives of eleven major Old Testament characters. For the New Testament, there are three chapters on Jesus, five other biographical sketches of New Testament characters, and then two chapters on Paul. It closes out with a concluding chapter on the profile of a servant leader.
In all the book is really good on content but not on readability. This book is an academic work and doesn't have much appeal to a wider audience. This is a disappointment for me because with all the generic leadership books out there (whether Christian or secular), a solid book on leadership grounded on Biblical principles like this one, is a rare thing.
If nothing else, Howell needs to chill out with his extensive, obsessive use of references. For example, normally if I were to be writing something that comes from a large chunk of Romans chapter one, I would simply use one reference at the end of my thought containing all the verses I am referring to. Like this: (Rom 1:6-13). But Howell will interject (Rom 1:6) a ridiculous number (Rom 1:7) of references (Rom 1:8) within a single paragraph (Rom 1:9) or even a single sentence (Rom 1:10) making it practically impossible (Rom 1:11) to read (Rom 1:12) what he is writing (Rom 1:13). Such obsessive and annoying references are completely unnecessary and it only detracts from the content Howell is trying to convey. And he does this nearly once per page. Sigh.